Tag Archive | Bryan Forbes

Irène Papas – The Fabulous Greek

My mind, sound by nature, was my teacher. I need no more.

I offered my husband a silent tongue and gentle looks.

I knew when to have my way and when to let him have his.

– Euripides The Women of Troy (642-651)

Irène Papas was finally placed under the direction of the Bristol-born filmmaker J. Lee Thompson (1914-2002) to play the role of Maria Pappadimos in The Guns of Navarone (1961). Her role is of a hardened Greek partisan fighter who develops a liking for fiery Andrea, a character played by Anthony Quinn in this film about a Nazi big-gun stronghold overlooking the Mediterranean.

American film producer and scriptwriter Carl Foreman’s The Guns of Navarone was a motion picture “event.” Being the first of Alistair MacLean’s pulsating novels to be turned into a movie, it’s a high-powered action movie by Highroad Films, an Anglo-American firm (1). Magnificently filmed in Cinemascope and Eastmancolor by Pathe, and set in 1943 during WW2, it dealt with Allied commandos and Greek resistance fighters assigned to destroy two huge newly-designed radar-controlled guns on the German-held Aegean Sea island of Navarone. These guns prevented the vital Aegean Sea channel from being used by the Allies in World War II.

Director J. Lee Thompson, who was a last minute replacement of Alexander “Sandy” Mackendrick (1912-1993), was by that time one of the most flamboyant writer-producer-directors, with Ice Cold in Alex (Desert Attack, 1958), North West Frontier (Flame Over India) and Tiger Bay (both in 1959) to his credit to which, he would later on add a string of noteworthy movies such as Cape Fear, Taras Bulba (both in 1962), Kings of the Sun (1963), Mackenna’s Gold (1969), etc.

Irène was to be part of an impressive stellar cast who have carved a prominent niche for themselves in the motion-picture world: Gregory Peck, David Niven, Anthony Quinn, Stanley Baker, Anthony Quayle, James Robertson Justice, Richard Harris, Bryan Forbes, etc. For the required amount of feminine appeal, besides Irène, Gia Scala portrayed Anna, another fighter.

James Darren (who sadly passed away at the age of 88 on September 02, 2024) played Spyros Pappadimos, a Greek-American boy skilled with a machine gun, who also performs a Greek folk song called “Yassu (Wedding Song)” in the movie.

Even though Cypress and Yugoslavia were initially considered for production possibilities, the final choice for on-location shoot fell on the Island of Rhodes, in the heart of the Aegean Sea. It’s not that the choice for filming the motion picture of this dimension didn’t face any difficulties in Greece. During that time, the local processing of the film was unpredictable; and the local sound systems were based on 17 ½ mm. tape, rather than the 35 the crew were used to. The only projection facilities that could be used were in a large hall at the local police station. The acoustics defied anyone to understand the dialogue. Then again, undeniably, the people were warm and hospitable, and willing to do superhuman feats in order to please. The government, the airlines, the hotels, etc, all contributed more in the way of service, material and personnel.

In mid-1960, as part of promotion of the movie, a stalagmite (an incrustation formed on the floor of a cavern) from the Luray Caverns of Virginia was despatched to Greece where it was swapped with a stalagmite from the Petralona Caverns of Greece and sent to Luray. These stalagmites were officially exchanged in Greece between Gregory Peck and Irène Papas.

In the course of almost seven months of shooting in Greece and England, the final stage of filming was completed in the studio in England – in one of the largest outdoor sets which took five months to construct using tubular steel, timber and about 14 miles of cable. Set-making has always been a big part of a film’s budget but it goes in phases. More than 160 workmen on a seven-day-a-week basis were involved. The outcome was the enormous guns and cave fortress towering over 140 feet into the air and stretched over an area of almost two acres, to represent the German-occupied base on the Greek island. Despite the collapse of this fantastically expensive set at Shepperton Studios as well as the continuously mounting budget, the filming had a wrap by mid-October 1960.

The movie turned out to be a blockbuster hit and not only racked up in box-office grosses but wide acclaim including royal treatment around Europe via galas before crowned heads. Special showings were attended by late Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip of Great Britain; Princess Grace and Prince Rainier III of Monaco; then newly-wed King Baudouin and his Queen Fabiola of Belgium; and the King Paul and Queen Frederica of Greece. King Paul conferred the Order of Phoenix and rank of Brigadier of the Greek Army on Carl Foreman for his services to Greece through the filming of The Guns of Navarone. The film netted 1962 Academy Award nominations which included Best Motion Picture, Best Directing, Best Writing (Screenplay – based on material from another medium), Best Music (Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture), Best Film Editing, etc., and the film won for Best Special Effects in the 34th Academy Awards.

Sometime earlier Irène Papas top-lined in the title role of director Georges Tzavellas’ Antigone (Antigoni, 1961) – a B/W movie (with English subtitles) of such profound dimension that it helped fortify Irène’s reputation as a fine interpreter of Greek classics on movies.

The screenplay by Tzavellas was adapted in its classical form from Sophocles’ poetic parable of the Greek tragedy of Oedipus, King of Thebes though with a modernized Greek text in the name of poetic licence. Set in the ancient Greek city of Thebes, Irène’s dramatic beauty dominates as Antigone who is condemned to death for defying King Creon by burying her two brothers killed in a quarrel over their succession to the throne of Thebes.

The shooting schedule at Alfa Studios, Athens, stretched to 58 days and the production cost ran in excess of $200,000/- which was believed to be a record high for a film made by the Greek film industry at that time. The production, which regrettably suffered delays, was carried out by Greek talent throughout; also featuring Greek performers: Manos Katrakis, Maro Kontou, Nikos Kazis, Ilia Aibikou as Eurydice, etc. Part of the cast were soldiers and horsemen of the Royal Greek Guard and Army and 500 actors of the Greek theatre and cinema. Arghyris Kounadis provided the music score.

While Antigone movie project was initiated by a Connecticut exhibitor through his Norma Film Productions, he had every expectation that the movie will eventually earn a profit due to its special qualities in relation to the cultural heritage of Greece. As a matter of fact, all the financial backing was made by American investors of Greek descent from “outside the industry” who were motivated by a pride in their Greek heritage and a desire to dispel the notion that Greece exports nothing but restaurateurs. Furthermore, this Greek heritage lining the theme of the movie was a profitable aspect the filmmakers believed helped Antigone in its promotion for its distribution to schools, colleges, libraries, cinema clubs, etc.

Distinguished productions of the classic Greek tragedies dealing with highly charged subjects as revenge, retribution and matricide, are rare owing to elevation of concept and nobility of performance. As the title character in Finos Films’ Electra (Elektra/Ilektra, 1962), the Greek classical tragedy of yore, Irène Papas finally got the chance to show off her acting chops.

As the story goes, Electra is the daughter of King Agamemnon (Theodore Demetriou) and Clytemnestra (Aleka Katselli). Upon his victorious return from the Trojan War, Agamemnon was killed during his bath by his wife Clytemnestra and her paramour Ægisthus (Fivos Razi/aka. Phoebus Rhazis), while the children Orestes (Petros Ampelas) and Electra (Elsie Pittas) waited outside. Following the murder, the boy Orestes is taken away to safety outside of the country by an old retainer whilst his sister Electra remained at the palace a virtual prisoner. In the euphoria of victory, Clytemnestra and Ægisthus married and at a subsequent time, Electra was married off to a poor farmer who respected her.

It was not until years later Orestes (Giannis Fertis) returned with a friend, and the siblings united. They plot to avenge their father Agamemnon whose murder had taken place following his return from Troy with his lover, Cassandra, one of the 50 children of King Priam of Troy and his principal wife Hecuba. In due course, Orestes killed Ægisthus during a celebration. Orestes also gained the support of the followers of the dead king whose valour was imprinted on their minds. However, Electra (Papas) urges her older brother Orestes to kill their mother Clytemnestra as well. Her contention was vengeance for the murder of their father. Orestes duly complies with Electra’s wishes. Be that as it may, shocked by the killing of Clytemnestra, the great majority of followers of the brother and sister turned against them and drove them away from the land.

Written and directed by Michael Cacoyannîs based on Euripides trilogy (The Trojan Women, 1971 and Iphigenia, 1976 followed) this United Artists’ movie version contained murder, adultery, vengeance and matricide. Purportedly made for a budget of about US$70,000/-, Electra which received plenty of art house attention in theatres world over, was shot on location in Mycenae and Argos in Greece with excellent direction, production values including dramatically powerful score by quite musically knowledgeable left-wing composer Mikis Theodorakis. The visual beauty of cinematography was by English cameraman Walter Lassally who will be back in Greece couple of years later to lens there another Greek feature, Zorba the Greek, under direction of Michael Cacoyannîs. According to Walter Lassally, Cacoyannîs pre-planned his scenes down to the last detail although he didn’t actually make sketches and his scripts were written in shots, not in scenes.

Irène’s noble beauty, facial features and performance as Electra were so appropriate that a writer once quoted in a magazine feature: “What a superb face Papas has for Greek tragedy. She is, almost, for Michael Cacoyannîs what Liv Ullmann is for Ingmar Bergman.” The admirable hairdo Irène featured in Electra was specifically created under the inspiration of Cacoyannîs which Irène retained long enough to sport at the Festival de Cannes in May 1962.

In fact, UA took precautions to ensure that no one confuses their Electra at the 15th Cannes Film Festival 1962, with the Greek-sponsored Electra, which was a filmed version of the Greek National Theatre presentation of the Sophocles version staged at the ancient Theatre of Epidaurus. Importantly, the UA version, a prize-winner of Best Cinematic Transposition (as best play-based film) is by Euripides.

Around that time, the German-born Austrian actor Karlheinz Böhm (1928-2014) planned to write and direct a modern version of Electra, set in post-war Germany with all contemporary fads and fashions, to be called “Trial of Orestes”. However, that project did not materialize. In early 1964, Electra won the Best Foreign Picture Award at the annual Cleveland Critics’ Circle prize luncheon while Irène Papas took honours as Best Foreign Language Actress.   Jo                                 

Notes:

  1. Something like 80% of the film’s budget was spent in sterling which qualified the film for the Eady Plan/Fund, a British film aid scheme which was, at that time, the envy of most other European film producing nations. The Eady Fund, which gets its income from a slice of box-office takings, is divvied out to producers of British Quota pictures. Anyone who makes a film in the UK can qualify for this aid, provided that the Quota laws are observed and that the film is made by a British company. The side-effect of this measure was an increase in the number of films Hollywood made in England. For instance, $1,000,000 plus went from the Eady kitty to The Guns of Navarone. The Eady Plan, named after British diplomat Sir Wilfred Griffin Eady, was terminated in 1985;
  2. Up to now, the sources of reference for this tribute (in 6 parts) to Irène Papas are archives of the past including printed publications and visual media. DVD/Blu-ray of most of the movies mentioned in this write-up is available with some leading dealers.
  3. DVD sleeves/images shown here are only for promotional purpose. Source: Wikipedia, amazon.com, imdb, and from DVD sleeves.
  4. This illustrated article is an affectionate nosegay to the movies referred above. Please refer to “About” of my webpage for more details.

(© Joseph Sébastine/Manningtree Archive)

Irène Papas Makes An Entrance

Screen actress Irène Papas became synonymous with world-class Greek stage/screen performers in the category of Katina Paxinou (Katina Konstantopoulou, 1900-1973), Melina Mercouri (Maria-Amalia Mercouri, 1920-1994), Eva Kotamanidou (1936-2020), etc, irrespective, to few critics, some may be of dark complexion or with language fluency issues.

One of Irène’s bad experiences came from actor Spencer Tracy during the production of the Western movie, Tribute to a Bad Man (1956) which Tracy never finished because director Robert Wise (1914-2005) fired him. A book describes how Tracy derided co-star Irène because she was too clumsy and too tall (big raw-boned five feet ten inches in her bare feet, as tall as Tracy) and her English didn’t suit him because she was from Greece.

Greece which is domicile to Greek, one of the world’s oldest written languages, as well as to minority languages and Greek dialects, English together with German, French and Italian were the most common foreign languages spoken. Apart from her native Greek and competence in English, Irène also spoke German and Italian. As a matter of fact, Irène had been in London where she made effort to perfect her almost fluent English.

In those days, foreign-language features showed an increase in bookings and according to top players in U.S. movie circles, besides A-List performers such as Sophia Loren, Gina Lollobrigida, Simone Signoret, Alec Guinness and Maximilian Schell, the other foreign film personalities whose names became familiar to U.S. audiences during 1962 included Alain Delon, Claudia Cardinale, Marcello Mastroianni, Jeanne Moreau, Elsa Martinelli, Melina Mercouri, Horst Buchholz, Maria Schell, Irène Papas, Romy Schneider, Alida Valli, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Alberto Sordi and Christian Marquand.

These best-known of the foreign stars were considered marquee names capable enough to draw patrons to the box-office, and almost all of them have either made pictures in Hollywood or appeared in English-language pictures filmed in Europe by American show business companies.

To a great extent, those who are famous stay that way because the press keeps them in the public eye. As for the gifted Irène Papas whom many have waxed poetic in praise of her, upswing on her career also gifted her ample occasions to meet a number of influential people in the film industry, some of them veritable volcano of knowledge and inspiration. It would have been completely in character that her career also brought her time to socialize with the prettiest people, most of them exceedingly rich and ripe, not boors or bores. Then again, one also had to good-naturedly tolerate a great deal of unprofessionalism, too. She was once bestowed with the title “Europe’s Woman” for her efforts to bolster European civilization.

As an award-winning actress who personified Greek female beauty on the cinema screen and on the stage, Irène Papas starred alongside fashionable Hollywood stars of the time such as Anthony Quinn, Gregory Peck, James Cagney, Kirk Douglas, etc. With Kirk Douglas and Alex Cord, she co-starred (as Ida Ginetta) in director Martin Ritt’s The Brotherhood (Mafia, 1968), an excellent Godfather predecessor produced by Kirk Douglas, one of the best paid actors in Hollywood during that time.

It was Irène’s association with Michael Cacoyannîs (1922-2011) that paved way for Irène’s brilliant performances in the title role in Electra (1962); in Zorba the Greek (Alexis Zorbas, 1964); in The Trojan Women (1971) and also in Sweet Country (Glykeia patrida, 1986), a forceful drama filmed in Greece. These are part of a clutch of films rightly considered as the high point of Irène’s film career. Cacoyannîs is the Greek Cypriot theatre/film director who introduced actress Melina Mercouri (as a good femme fatale) through his 1955 film, Stella.   

Audiences across the world who have seen Zorba the Greek may remember Cacoyannîs’ treatment of Irène Papas in the role of the widow when the viewer first saw glimpses of her face as she hung her immaculate sheets on the clothesline while it flapped in the wind.

Sweet Country, based on a novel by Caroline Richards, is about the emotional turmoil that befalls an American expatriate couple, Anna Willing (Jane Alexander) and professor husband Ben (John Cullum) while living under military rule following the September 1973 Rightist military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet Ugarte after the assassination of Chile’s first socialist President Salvador Allende (1908-1973). The film is an indictment of conditions that existed at that time when lead character Anna is drawn into the resistance against Pinochet as she attempt to get the torture victims across the border.

In 1968, Irène had an on-going contract to star in director John Huston’s epic production of The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969), based on the 1943 classic play La Folle de Chaillot by French novelist (Hippolyte) Jean Giraudoux. The film featured an all-star cast of Katharine Hepburn, Charles Boyer, Yul Brynner, Giulietta Masina, Edith Evans, Danny Kaye, John Gavin, Paul Henreid, Margaret Leighton, Richard Chamberlain, Donald Pleasence, and Nanette Newman.

The production of The Madwoman of Chaillot was not all smooth sailing. Few days before the production began in Nice, France, the Producers had profound reservations about director Huston who had difference of opinion on the modernization of the movie’s theme. They clinched a deal with British director Bryan Forbes to take over direction of the movie at very short notice. Furthermore, days into the shooting at the Studios de la Victorine, Nice, France, Irène opted out of her role which went to English stage actress Edith Evans DBE. Irène too had not been in a good frame of mind with the characterisation of the role of Josephine she was portraying. All this put-downs were newsworthy in the show business circles.

More a proven actress than a glamorous star alone, Irène Papas has starred in numerous movies, some of them forgettable except for her presence in them. Nonetheless, there are enough significant movies she has done that became the consuming interest to her celebrity status. Listed below, in order of year of release, are some of Irène’s movies in my collection (1):

Irène Papas acted as Yvonne Lebeau, a dancer at Cote Bleu, a little nightclub in downtown Algiers in The Man from Cairo (Crime Squad/Dramma nella Kasbah, 1953). Based on story by Hungarian novelist Ladislas Fodor and directed by Ray H. Enright (and Edoardo Anton – uncredited), it was filmed on location in Algeria and Italy. The movie center upon a fortune in gold, lost on the North African desert, which lures a variety of wealth-seekers. After many twists and turns, an American tourist and General Dumont solve the mystery of the lost gold. Although Irène only had a short spell in the earlier part of the movie, George Raft, Gianna Maria Canale, and Massimo Serato in prominent roles had better scope to display their acting talents;

Irène did the starring role of Faidia in Theodora, Slave Empress (Teodora, Impératrice di Bisanzio, 1954), an Italian production by Lux Film with a cast of hundreds, massive sets and in dazzling Pathécolor directed by Riccardo Freda. Stunningly beautiful Gianna Maria Canale, the director’s better half, played the role of Teodora, the daughter of a bear feeder at the amphitheatre who rose to become empress of Byzantium, the celebrated consort of the handsome Emperor Justinian/Giustiniano (Georges Marchal). Teodora champions the causes of the common people, to the displeasure of the prime minister, Giovanni Cappodocia (Henri Guisol), the chief troublemaker who breeds conspiracy. The film marked the second co-starring role of Irène with Gianna Maria Canale, the first being The Man from Cairo.

In 1954, Attila (Attila, il flagello di Dio/Attila, Hombre o Demonio/Attila, fléau de Dieu) was released with Irène in the role of Grune. The film featured the cult of the most ruthless conqueror of all time – the barbarian Attila the Hun who, with sword and flame, swept across the civilised world in the year 450 A.D. Even the mighty Roman Empire was marked for his conquests. A Dino De Laurentiis and Carlo Ponti production for Lux Film, directed by Pietro Francisci (1906-1977), Anthony Quinn gave the title role pure savagery while romancing Sophia Loren in the role of Attila’s woman Honoria. Jo                                        

Notes:  

  1. The listed reviews in this tribute is limited only to those films in my personal collection;
  2. DVD/Blu-ray of most of the movies mentioned in this write-up is available with some leading dealers.
  3. Up to now, the sources of reference for this tribute to Irène Papas are archives of the past including printed publications and visual media. DVD sleeves/images shown here are only for promotional purpose. Source: Wikipedia, amazon.com, imdb, and from DVD sleeves.
  4. This illustrated article is an affectionate nosegay to the movies referred above. Please refer to “About” of my webpage for more details.

(© Joseph Sébastine/Manningtree Archive)